Thursday, September 23, 2010
Meaningful work
I think that pretty much sums it up for our students, doesn’t it? It’s not that they don’t want to work hard. It’s that they don’t want to expend too much energy on work that isn’t meaningful. When we see reports of rampant plagiarism or tales of students who want to do as little as possible in order to get a grade, isn’t that an indication that they’re doing work that’s not meaningful to them? When students are working on something that they’re passionate about, rather than apathetic, don’t most of these so-called generational ‘values’ or ‘character’ issues disappear? Contrary to what many believe, our students don’t want to just get by. They just want better work. The preceding was taken from Scott McLeod’s blog (dangerously ! irrelevant) (http://dangerouslyirrelevant.org/2010/09/our-students-want-better-work-not-less-work.html)worth working for, and the other kind of work is worth letting go of, finished or not. (The Art of Non-Conformity, p. 10)
I think that pretty much sums it up for our students, doesn’t it? It’s not that they don’t want to work hard. It’s that they don’t want to expend too much energy on work that isn’t meaningful. When we see reports of rampant plagiarism or tales of students who want to do as little as possible in order to get a grade, isn’t that an indication that they’re doing work that’s not meaningful to them? When students are working on something that they’re passionate about, rather than apathetic, don’t most of these so-called generational ‘values’ or ‘character’ issues disappear? Contrary to what many believe, our students don’t want to just get by. They just want better work. The preceding was taken from Scott McLeod’s blog (dangerously ! irrelevant) (http://dangerouslyirrelevant.org/2010/09/our-students-want-better-work-not-less-work.html)Many people believe that the key to an improved lifestyle is less work. I think it’s better work. I believe that most of us want to work hard, but we want to do the kind of work that energizes us and makes a positive impact on others. That kind of work is worth working for, and the other kind of work is worth letting go of, finished or not. (The Art of Non-Conformity, p. 10)
I think that pretty much sums it up for our students, doesn’t it? It’s not that they don’t want to work hard. It’s that they don’t want to expend too much energy on work that isn’t meaningful. When we see reports of rampant plagiarism or tales of students who want to do as little as possible in order to get a grade, isn’t that an indication that they’re doing work that’s not meaningful to them? When students are working on something that they’re passionate about, rather than apathetic, don’t most of these so-called generational ‘values’ or ‘character’ issues disappear? Contrary to what many believe, our students don’t want to just get by. They just want better work. The preceding was taken from Scott McLeod’s blog (dangerously ! irrelevant) (http://dangerouslyirrelevant.org/2010/09/our-students-want-better-work-not-less-work.html)
Call it the Fisch Flip
Karl Fisch is a 20-year veteran of Arapahoe High School, located south of Denver, Colorado. For the past 14 years, the one-time maths teacher has been the school’s technology
co-ordinator. But a round of budget cuts forced him to take on extra duties – and a few weeks ago, he returned to the classroom to teach an algebra course to 9th and 10th graders (14 and 15 year-olds).
However, instead of lecturing about polynomials and exponents during class time – and then giving his young charges 30 problems to work on at home – Fisch has flipped the sequence. He’s recorded his lectures on video and uploaded them to YouTube for his 28 students to watch at home. Then, in class, he works with students as they solve problems and experiment with the concepts.
Lectures at night, “homework” during the day. Call it the Fisch Flip.
“When you do a standard lecture in class, and then the students go home to do the problems, some of them are lost. They spend a whole lot of time being frustrated and, even worse, doing it wrong,” Fisch told me.
“The idea behind the videos was to flip it. The students can watch it outside of class, pause it, replay it, view it several times, even mute me if they want,” says Fisch, who emphasises that he didn’t come up with the idea, nor is he the only teacher in the country giving it a try. “That allows us to work on what we used to do as homework when I’m they’re to help students and they’re there to help each other.”
When he puts it like that, you want to slap your forehead at the idea’s inexorable logic. You wonder why more schools aren’t doing it this way. That’s the power of flipping. It melts calcified thinking and leads to solutions that are simple to envision and to implement.
Friday, September 10, 2010
Five Classroom Discipline Strategies
“You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make it drink,” is my
favorite cliché phrase as a teacher. It comforts me to recite it on
days when I spend hours on a lesson plan only to have an
unauthorized, off-color dance and giggles from the crowd upstage
my efforts.
This phrase not only eases my anger, it keeps me going.
Allen Mendler, Ph.D. shares my philosophy. He says he’s
discovered you “can't change anybody else's behavior.” Mendler’s
goal as a teacher and a school psychologist is to try to influence the
child’s behavior, not change it. To do this, Mendler says we must
“maximize the 10, 20, maybe 30 percent of the influence that's ours
and to make our voice as interesting, melodic, harmonious … even
as seductive as we possibly can, because as we all know, there are
always voices that compete for the hearts, minds and souls of our
kids.”
Mendler offers many ways for teachers to influence student
behavior. Below are five ways that you can use in your own
classroom to encourage on-task behavior.
PRESE RVE DI G N ITY
When discussing discipline, Mendler says the most important thing
is to “pick strategies that at the very least preserve dignity.” He
questions the tactic of putting students’ names on the chalkboard
when they are misbehaving. By publicizing a student’s misdeeds,
teachers put the student’s competency into jeopardy and set the
stage for a power struggle.
Instead, when dealing with an in-class disruption, Mendler suggests
using P-E-P, which stands for Privacy, Eye contact, and Proximity.
This strategy helps balance the control between the student and the
teacher.
For example, Mendler says if a student mumbled something during
class, the teacher would “get as close as you can to the student with
as much eye contact as that student can tolerate and with as much
privacy as realistically is available in a public setting of a classroom,
(and) convey your message of correction.”
He suggests you could also write your correction on a sticky note
or an index card. “With some students, it works even better to use
a Post-it note or an index card, and instead of saying what you
would normally say your correction to be, write your correction
down on a piece of paper,” Mendler said.
BASE YOUR RULES ON P R I
Prevention is the key in many aspects of life; education is no
different. By having effective rules, teachers can limit disruptive
student behavior.
Mendler suggests focusing on a values-based classroom. At the
beginning of the year, Mendler tells his students his three values:
take care of yourself, take care of each other, take care of this place.
He then invites his students to be important participants in coming
up with rules that represent examples of these principles.
“I like to give the lion's share of the responsibility for the
development of rules to students,” Mendler said. “One thing
certainly not to do with regard to rules is to have many, many of
them. Quite frankly, the good kids don't need a million rules. And
the bad kids, the more rules you give them, the more ideas you
might actually give them to break rules.”
HAVE EFFECT I V
In my classroom, the students develop the four rules (a tactic
Mendler recommends). I also have a list of sequential consequences
(a tactic Mendler does not recommend). After this year, I see why
he doesn’t recommend the list; not every strategy works for every
kid and sometimes I give ineffective consequences.
“I think that's the wrong way to go about doing things, because as
an educator, it locks you into doing something based upon what
the system says, rather than based upon what you think is going to
most effectively work with that particular student,” Mendler said.
Instead, Mendler suggests checking in with the students and asking
their opinion about what consequence or consequences they think
might work.
HAVE A PLAN
Before ever stepping into a classroom, teachers should have a plan
for crisis situations and they should count on teaching the plan to
their students. When dealing with a crisis situation, like a fight, it is
important that students know what they should do: Stay away and
don't join in.
“The teacher, or the authority person, needs to reassure him or
herself, as well as everybody else, that since you're the person in
charge, you're going to be the primary person to deal with the
issue,” Mendler said.
In addition to a plan for crisis situations, have a plan for less
destructive behaviors, such as yelling out. This way you will be less
tempted to kick students out of class over annoying, yet
manageable conduct.
“I want it to be hard for kids to throw their education away,”
Mendler said. “I want to make it difficult for them to get
themselves kicked out of a class.” Instead, Mendler suggests
ignoring minor behavior infractions and addressing possible
consequences after class with the student.
BE F A I R A N D DEF I N E FA I R N ESS
One of my least favorite things to hear as a teacher is: “That’s not
fair!” I have to fight the urge to yell back, “Life’s not fair!” But, the
truth is: It’s not.
To combat the “That’s not fair!” cry, Mendler tells teachers to
address the fairness issue the first day of school. “It's very, very
important to make a distinction between being fair and treating
everybody exactly the same way,” Mendler said.
At the beginning of each school year, Mendler tells his students he
wants them to all be successful. But, he explains the definition of
“successful” is different for each student.
“What I mean by 'success' is you getting better in whatever
academic area we're doing — you getting better today than you
were yesterday…not necessarily better than everybody else in the
world or even in this classroom,” Mendler said.
When teachers embrace the individuality of each child from the
beginning, students will be more willing to accept different
consequences for each student without complaint.
S T R ATE G IES AREN’T ONE-
Whatever strategies you decide to employ in the classroom,
Mendler suggests that you keep one thing in mind: working with
students is a roller coaster ride. A strategy may not work
immediately or the student may slip back into old behavior.
“Before you decide whether or not something works or doesn't
work with a student or a group of students, try it at least five times
for over a trial period of two to three weeks, and evaluate it on this
basis,” Mendler said.
Thursday, September 9, 2010
From: Pencils, Progress and Perfection
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
Pedagogy
A Different Drug Problem
The other day, someone at a store in our town read that a Methamphetamine lab had been found in an old farmhouse in the adjoining county and he asked me a rhetorical question, “Why didn't we have a drug problem when you and I were growing up?”
I replied, I had a drug problem when I was young: I was drug to church on Sunday morning. I was drug to church for weddings and funerals. I was drug to family reunions and community socials no matter the weather.
I was drug by my ears when I was disrespectful to adults. I was also drug to the woodshed when I disobeyed my parents, told a lie, brought home a bad report card, did not speak with respect, spoke ill of the teacher or the preacher, or if I didn't put forth my best effort in everything that was asked of me.
I was drug to the kitchen sink to have my mouth washed out with soap if I uttered a profanity. I was drug out to pull weeds in mom's garden and flower beds and cockleburs out of dad's fields. I was drug to the homes of family, friends and neighbors to help out some poor soul who had no one to mow the yard, repair the clothesline, or chop some firewood, and, if my mother had even known that I took a single dime as a tip for this kindness, she would have drug me back to the woodshed.
Those drugs are still in my veins and they affect my behavior in everything I do, say or think. They are stronger than cocaine, crack, or heroin; and, if today's children had this kind of drug problem, America would be a better place.
God bless the parents who drugged us.
Friday, September 3, 2010
Guest Post: Letter to a High School Teacher
This post is from a Middle School student to their future High School teacher. Have you seen that movie “American Pie”? You know how Jim thinks he knows “things”, but only knows apple pie?
Remember that when I walk into your class for the first time. I will likely have what my old social studies teacher calls my “bravado mask” on much of the first quarter. Whatever that is…I don’t get it. We watched a lot of movies. I had an English teacher that talked about how he didn’t expect us to be professional writers because, well, none of us were. That gave me confidence to take risks in my writing (he always told us to do so!). Please don’t expect me to write like Lois Lowry or Jordan Sonnenblick. But, they’re cool.
Oh, here are a few things I’d like you to know before I get into your class. I still care a lot about what people think of me. My school counselor says that is my most adult-like trait. I don’t get it. I still have to move around a lot in class. I’m addicted to teachers allowing us to work in groups. I kind of get why. I see the workers at Target always talking (my math teacher said he likes to dress up in khaki pants and a red polo on weekends and walk around at Target answering people’s questions) My PE and computer teachers used sarcasm and, for the most part, I understood what was going on. However, I did get in trouble a few times when I was trying to be sarcastic but it came across as me being a jerk. I’m still learning how to use sarcasm. I understand that you are trying to treat me like I’m an adult. But, I’m not yet. Point to the older students for me to look up to. Especially if they are cute. In all honesty, I’m not too afraid of the school work and homework because my middle school teachers have trained me to only think about that lame test we take every spring. Seriously, that is all they talk about. The only thing I have mastered is how to bubble in circles. I think that is sarcasm.
I’m still immature and my parents say I will be until I get a real job other than handing out flyers for the local ice cream shop. You should try their mint-n-chip…it’s a party in your mouth! Especially if you put rainbow sprinkles on top of the ice cream! Now that’s sarcasm! Right? The only remaining curiosity I have is related to my social life: both my real and made up one in my mind. Sometimes I get the two mixed up. I want friends, but I want to be left alone – both make life easier. Even though I may look annoyed when you talk to me, I am listening to what you are saying just like Jason Biggs’ character in “American Pie” is outwardly annoyed with his dad giving him advice on “things”, but inside is intently listening. Oh, I secretly like Justin Bieber.